Movie Reviews

Get Smart

Reviewed by: Joshua Starnes
Rating:
7 out of 10
Movie Details:
View here

Cast:
Steve Carell as Maxwell Smart
Anne Hathaway as Agent 99
Dwayne Johnson as Agent 23
Alan Arkin as The Chief
Terence Stamp as Siegfried
Terry Crews as Agent 91
David Koechner as Larabee
Masi Oka as Bruce
Nate Torrence as Lloyd
Ken Davitian as Shtarker
David S. Lee as Ladislas Krstic
Bill Murray as Agent 13
James Caan as The President
Patrick Warburton as Hymie

Review:
Most adaptations of old television shows are frankly chores to get through. Their jokes are obvious, their characters are flat, and they spend a lot of their time with nostalgic winks and nods at their source material, hoping that's enough to bring the audience along for the ride. It's with some surprise then that, despite suffering from all those problems to one degree or another, "Get Smart" is genuinely entertaining.

To be fair, some adaptations play straight and still don't work, but at least they try. "Get Smart" falls somewhere in between the two extremes. Mentions are made about the original CONTROL of the '60s and its Cold War era battles against CHAOS, there's even a museum devoted to the subject complete with all of Don Adams' original hardware. But underneath that museum lies the modern day CONTROL, still locked in battle with CHAOS, recast as part of the War on Terror. And that war has no more ardent would-be warrior than senior analyst Maxwell Smart (Steve Carell).

Buttoned up and by the numbers, Max is a believer in detail, detail, detail, boring the adventuresome field agents to death with his analyzing of his opponents' personal lives in the belief that understanding them as people will give him the knowledge in how to defeat them. It's one of a couple of rare moments of genuine insight in that fast paced summer movies just don't have time for. And "Get Smart" is very fast, from Max's rocket speed delivery on down. No sooner does it start then all of CONTROL's agents have their covers blown and Max finds himself finally getting a shot at his dream job as a field agent.

There's a lot to like about "Get Smart," and most of it has to do with Carell. He's managed the difficult task of playing Max Smart without doing an impersonation of Don Adams. All of the character touches are there, especially Max's rapid fire monotone delivery that seems to take no notice of how silly some of the things he's saying are, bespeaking an almost insane amount of self-esteem. Max is capable to an absurd degree, but they manage to make it work, mainly by combining it with his inexperience so that as often as he bumbles, he gets right back up.

He's helped out by a decent supporting cast, most notably Alan Arkin as the irascible Chief who steals every scene he's in, but everyone else is hit and miss. Masi Oka and Nate Torrence have basically one joke between them as the put upon tech support guys, but they do it well. Dwayne Johnson has some of the best early moments as super suave Agent 23, who finds it hard to adjust to life as an office worker, but he quickly fades in the background along with everyone else as Max takes center stage. And that's for the best, as Max is the only consistently funny character, so it's a good thing he's the main one. As Max's reluctant partner, Anne Hathaway's main job is to look good, look put upon, and look at Max. She gets one good joke, and that's all. She does her job well but big budget summer movies, designed more often than not for a male audience, aren't usually inclined to well developed roles for women, and "Get Smart" is no exception. The less said about Terrence Stamp the better.

Not everything works. Every so often the filmmakers allow their worst impulses to take reign and go over the top or drag a joke on too long. They're trying to get at least one really big laugh, but they're trying too hard, and end up falling flat instead. They also take a lot of potshots at the Bush administration that are so obvious you'd think they came out of a "Saturday Night Live" sketch.

It's also strangely uneven in tone, particularly in regards to violence. Despite the ridiculous situations they get into, Max and 99 are still spies. They shoot to kill and they rarely miss, which creates a film that sometimes wants to be family comedy, and sometimes an action movie, and those two impulses don't always mesh well. It adds a certain level of seriousness to "Get Smart" that the show never had, and might not be able to support.

All that aside, "Get Smart" is a nice afternoon diversion. There are no big laughs to be had, no matter how hard it tries, but there are lots and lots of chuckles, and that's probably good enough.

| 19 comments | Add a comment

COMMENTS (19)

Posted by:
Muhammad
June 22, 2008
No big laughs? Are you serious, Mr. Starnes?
Posted by:
Drew217
June 22, 2008
I think Mr. Starnes is refering to the Sandler, Myers style of comedies that are basically 10 minutes of bad filler between jokes.
Posted by:
Joshua Starnes
June 23, 2008
Yes, I'm serious. The jokes are well done, but they're also very obvious and very easy to see coming, and you never laugh as hard at a joke you already know the punchline. As soon as Max got his swiss army knife, it was just a matter of time before he hurt himself with it, and as soon as he was put in handcuffs it was obvious how he was going to do it.

The only reason it's as funny as it is, is because the jokes are delivered so well, but it's too inherently conservative to be really, really funny. Compare that to something like "Superbad" which not only has good delivery, but also subverts easy jokes and even when it goes for the expected punchline, it does it by a unique route, and that's why it's a movie that's almost nothing but big laughs.

"Get Smart" plays it safe throughout, and it's hard to get big laughs that way.
Posted by:
mk522
June 23, 2008
Yeah, Superbad was totally a great movie. I mean, what more could you want? F*** this and F*** that every other sentence.

God, what happened to the older generation's comedies...Airplane, Naked Gun, The Money Pit...all of those had obvious jokes and are twice as funny as todays "comedies."

It's obvious this reviewer doesn't get old school comedy and because he's smart and catches the punchlines before they happen, then the movie "falls flat."

Seems to me people ought to develop a more general sense of humor.
Posted by:
wow
June 23, 2008
he's right no big laughs, lots of chuckles. overall i thought it was OK. Too much little kid no killing in the action, and Hathaway annoyed me a little bit when she tried to be romantic and make jokes, I think she's a horrible actress, but that's just me. My theater was pretty empty and the only cheers were HIRO!! I LOVE U!!! which doesn't really count.. haha.
Posted by:
Joshua Starnes
June 23, 2008
I picked "Superbad" out of hat, and I picked something recent to be sure there was a shared frame of reference for what I was talking about. I don't expect it to be to everyone's taste, though I would suggest that what makes "Superbad" funny has nothing to do with the swearing and everything to do with the situations.

But any older comedy would have worked just as well because the best ones have unpredictability on their side. "Airplane's" jokes weren't obvious when it initially came out because no one had ever really done that kind of humor outside of sketch comedy before, and "Airplane" went beyond what TV could do because of budget and FCC restrictions.

But you could pick any really successful comedy, "Young Frankenstein" "Some Like It Hot" "The Life of Brian" and they all have two things in common in their jokes - unexpectedness and good delivery. And "Get Smart" which is a thoroughly modern comedy only has one of those.
Posted by:
John of John
June 28, 2008
It was obvious how he would try to get out of the handcuffs? He had a “swiss army” pocket knife, but out of the entire assortment you knew just which device he was going to use?

Please.


And those movies you just wrote about ""Young Frankenstein" "Some Like It Hot" "The Life of Brian" and they all have two things in common in their jokes - unexpectedness and good delivery.

You saw all of them as an adult?
Posted by:
Joshua Starnes
June 30, 2008
"It was obvious how he would try to get out of the handcuffs? He had a “swiss army” pocket knife, but out of the entire assortment you knew just which device he was going to use?"

Yes, after taking the trouble of showing off the crossbow, and knowing the character was competent enough not use the flamethrower, it was obvious which thing he was going to pick. It wasn't going to be an actual knife, because the movie's a comedy.

I saw some of those movies as a kid and some as an adult, but I'm not sure how relates to anything.
Posted by:
Luke
July 7, 2008
I don't understand how they can say that there were no big laughs in this. I thought this was the best action comedy since Hot Fuzz. I laughed the whole time

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